Bruce Calkin of Rotorua has been named the winner of a brand-new Isuzu D-Max
Bruce, who works for electricity and fibre solutions company Unison based in Rotorua, attended Fieldays with wife Julie on Saturday 3 December.
Collecting a Fieldays Smart Band at the gate, he registered his details and scanned it on the Isuzu site and dropped it into the back of the Ute at the end of the day. The prize, a white Isuzu D-Max LX Double Cab Auto 4WD, is valued at $61,990 and includes all on-road costs.
The prize comes at a great time for Bruce, who had just finished seven rounds of chemotherapy fo throat cancer and was awaiting news of his results.
“You’re bloody kidding me… I can’t believe it,” Bruce said to New Zealand National Fieldays Society chief executive Peter Nation on the phone.
“I thought he was having me on. It started to sink in when he said that I’d attended Fieldays and scanned my Smart Band to enter the draw to win a Ute and that I had won it”.
The four-day event, which has been running for 54 years, moved to the summer dates to play catch-up after Covid.
“We usually attend Fieldays every year, but Covid put a stop to that for a bit. It’s been a pain in my backside really,” says Bruce. “When I was diagnosed with cancer, I had to undergo a pre-treatment and have a tonsillectomy, then Julie got Covid, then I got Covid. So, it all got delayed. I didn’t end up starting treatment until September”.
When they heard Fieldays had moved to the summer dates, the Calkin’s thought it would be a good opportunity to attend again and have a day out.
“We brought a truckload of beef jerky, some wine and spent time looking at the range of outdoor fires,” says Bruce. “It was good to be back, it’s always such a great event.”
Collecting a Fieldays Smart Band at the gate, he registered his details and scanned it on the Isuzu site and dropped it into the back of the Ute at the end of the day. “Never in a million years did I think I would win it. I have only ever won $100 at Lotto, seems my luck might be changing!” says Bruce.
Containing innovative RFID technology, the Fieldays Smart Band allowed visitors to connect their details and scan their band to request relevant information from Fieldays exhibitors, enter competitions and claim giveaways
“The first place I’ll be driving it is around town for everyone to see, stopping in to show it off to family and friends,” says Bruce.
“Then we will head to the Redwoods with the bikes on the back. The last year has been pretty brutal, but you know it could be worse and at least I can still get out on the trails.”
Bruce and his wife Julie are both keen mountain bikers and the new Isuzu will be ideal for transporting their mountain bikes to and from the world-famous trails of the Whakarewarewa Forest.
Handing over the keys to the ute was Isuzu Utes New Zealand general manager Scott Kelsey.
“While the latest generation Isuzu D-Max has been on the market for two years now, it remains one of the newest utes on the market with a reputation for being tougher, safer and more powerful than ever thanks to a 3.5 tonne towing capacity, a 5-star ANCAP rating and a new 4JJ3 engine,” says Scott.
Adding to the D-Max legacy is the fact it was voted NZ4WD Magazine’s ‘Ute of the Year’ for 2021, the first time this model has won the coveted award and just a year after it was launched in New Zealand.
The D-Max is powered by a three-litre turbo-diesel engine, and with four variants and 15 configurations, there are plenty of options to suit all drivers.
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